Really? FCC rules:
(c) One or more indicators may be included with the call sign. Each indicator must be separated from the call sign by the slant mark (/) or by any suitable word that denotes the slant mark. If an indicator is self-assigned, it must be included before, after, or both before and after, the call sign.*No self-assigned indicator may conflict with any other indicator specified by the FCC Rules or with any prefix assigned to another country.* *M England (M3xxx and M6xxx - Foundation Class Licence, All others - Full Licence Grade) 14 27* As I said nobody enforces this. Your licensing may be different. Mike W0MU W0MU-1 CC Cluster w0mu.net On 12/12/2011 10:21 PM, Jan Erik Holm wrote: > This is so wrong. Please please stop spreading this wrong stuff. > > It is a mobile designator and NO nothing else. > > /Jim SM2EKM > ----------------- > On 2011-12-12 18:21, W0MU Mike Fatchett wrote: >> Legally signing /M is only legal if you are in England or one of the >> countries that uses the M prefix. It is readily accepted as Mobile but >> is not a legal designator. I am not sure that most of the ones you >> listed are legal IARU or ITU call designators. This could vary from >> country to country. >> >> >> >> Mike W0MU > _______________________________________________ > UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK _______________________________________________ UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK